Wednesday, March 24, 2010

TechQuest Draft 1

Stiverson-Project Description 4/7/10
There is such a push for success that is associated with the MEAP, we bar our percentage of success on the MEAP dealing with No Child Left Behind. Our third graders are expected to come in get associated with their teacher, their teacher's rules, the classroom, and how the teacher runs the classroom, and to get started with the first steps to working toward the MEAP all within the first few weeks.When I started teaching third grade, three years ago, I had to prepare my students to take the writing section. I was very concerned with their success, I couldn't help them answer any questions and I couldn't use my coin phrases on them; "Did you check your work? Did you make sure you used complete sentences? Did you answer the question?" Those third graders did the best they could with what skills they were taught.The second year I taught third grade we didn't have to complete the writing selection that was saved for fourth grade. I was very concerned with my students from that year, did I teach them well enough to have them be able to complete that writing selections. Did I "allocate most of the available time to activities designed to accomplish instructional goals" (Brophy article). Were they going to success?My school uses "America's Choice" as our writing curriculum. I have found that there are holes within this curriculum, but I have yet to find the time where I would be able to fill those holes with appropriate supplementation for my students. My main concern was their ability to take one of their writing pieces through the writing process in a timely manner. We work on a writing piece, i.e. narrative, memoir, report (informational), and poetry for weeks to get it polished enough to become a final draft. My students are working on their piece for weeks; during that time I am teaching them lessons on strategies to add to their piece, we are having peer conferences, as well as teacher conferences. To be honest by the time the piece is read y for the final draft I am tired of listening to it because I have listened to it for so long and my students are tired of working on it because it takes so long. Keeping this in mind I wanted to come up with an idea of how I could keep my students interested in their writing piece to take it quickly through the writing process. I wanted them to use the writing process on the MEAP.This past summer I took CEP 811 where I learned about blogging. I decided that I would love to be able to use a blog to help my students learn to take a piece through the writing process, conference using other students' pieces, and to make sure that when they are writing they add enough detail to make the reader understand and be able to picture what they are talking about. I have a college friend that ended up going to North Carolina to teach, she teaches third grade. I spoke with her about the idea of blogging; I had to talk her into it. We experimented with blogging between us and we decided what day we would work on it and we each set it up so it was tailed to our individual classroom.My students blog every Thursday. "Practice is one of the most important yet least appreciated aspects of learning in classrooms. Little or no practice may be needed for simple behaviors such as pronouncing words, but practice becomes more important as learning becomes complex. Successful practice involves polishing skills that are already established at rudimentary levels in order to make them smoother, more efficient and more automatic, and not trying to establish such skills through trial and error." (Brophy article) This was what I was concerned about with my students. We work on the writing process starting in Kindergarten and yet they never were given opportunities to up the anti with the process.
Below are three research sites that I found on-line to support the benefit of using blogging within the classroom. The information under each site is a snippet of information from the article.
Research:-Education World http://www.educationworld.com/a_tech/tech/tech217.shtml “Blogs, because of their ease of use, and because of the context of news and editorial column writing, have become a highly effective way to help students to become better writers. Research has long shown that students write more, write in greater detail, and take greater care with spelling, grammar, and punctuation, when they are writing to an authentic audience over the Internet.”
-Love to Know-Social Networking http://socialnetworking.lovetoknow.com/Educational_Blogs_for_Elementary_Students “Blogging can help students improve their writing skills, and can help them understand why learning to write is so important. While educational blogging is still in its early stages, some evidence suggests an increased interest on the part of participating students in the quality of their writing. This is attributed to the fact that the students' work will be published online and viewed by more people than just their teacher.”
-Teaching Today http://www.glencoe.com/sec/teachingtoday/educationupclose.phtml/47 “In addition to providing teachers with an excellent tool for communicating with students, there are numerous educational benefits of blogs. Blogs are:
Highly motivating to students, especially those who otherwise might not become participants in classrooms.
Excellent opportunities for students to read and write.
Effective forums for collaboration and discussion.
Powerful tools to enable scaffold learning or mentoring to occur”
4 common places of education:
Someone teaching-I will continue to teach my students about the writing process and all the steps that go with the writing process
Someone learning-My students will be learning about the writing process, learning how to write letters, write paragraphs, as well as learn to type in a blog with their final drafts.
Some subject matter-The blog will be used as an extension of the writing process. I want to use it as something that encourages them to use the writing process quicker and more realistically than just using our writing program.
In some setting-This idea will be incorporated into my students “off” day. This is a day where we get an extra special and go to the library. Our time in our classroom is less than a normal day. We will use this day to do our blogging. The students will get come up with their blogging topics in the beginning of the day and will use the first half hour to, hopefully, get their first draft completed. The next section of the day will be used to work on revision, peer revision conferences, editing, and peer editing conferences. This will lead them into the final drafts of their blogs. Every student will be expected to take their blog to the final draft stage.
This project was implemented after the first two semesters of school. This gave me time to work on MEAP prep and MEAPs and it gave me time to establish my classroom rules and routines. It also gave me time to talk my friend into the idea of blogging and give us time to blog to each other so that she felt a little bit more comfortable with the blogging concept.
This TechQuest will be evaluated at the end of the year to see if it was truly a benefit to my students. I’m also going to speak with the fourth grade teachers next year and see if there is a difference between my students work that year and previous years. If this project was a success I would like to continue using it in years to come. I would continue to use it to improve my students’ writing process skills.

7 comments:

  1. I am going to focus on the writing process too! I don't like to write, and my students never did either. It was always a challenge to get them interested in a topic and keep them motivated all the way through the writing process. I'm looking forward to seeing where you take your project and ideas we can share with each other!

    Are you focusing only on blogging, or do you plan to include other websites and sources?

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  2. Have you found relevant research on the use of blogging to improve student writing on standardized tests? Or to improve student writing in general?

    How is the blogging structured? Does each student have a 'pen pal,' with whom they exchange comments on their posts? Are students' given a particular topic (narrative, informative, poetry, etc.)?

    What will you particularly focus your Techquest on during 812? Are you going to pick one genre that the students will stick to in their blogs?

    This sounds like a great use of technology, I am looking forward to hearing more!

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  3. Writing is such a tough one for so many kids! Will you be doing a pre and post assessment in an effort to measure growth? Have you considered the thought that blogging in and of itself could help increase writing skills if attempts are made in effort towards spelling, grammar, punctuation, etc.? They could be getting double-duty practice with writing and not even know it!

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  4. I'm going to try to answer as many questions as possible. I am only focusing on blogging. I have a classroom blog and every student’s turns in a published blog by the end of the day. They work on their blog the entire day and they take it completely through the writing process (which is one of my problems of practice). With about an hour left of school we read my friends classroom blog and we discuss it as a class, many great discussions have stemmed from those blogs. I think pick from a jar with names in from students that have finished their blog by the deadline (which is another problem of practice-deadlines). The students who name I picked is the student that gets to blog for the day. Their blogs actually end up being writing cross the curriculum. We have blogged about science, social studies, reading, as well as current events in our school. I hope I answered most of the questions.

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  5. Blogs are a great motivational tool, when it comes to students and writing. My students are actually asking for permission to write reponses in our Alien Adventure blog. Many of them post to the blog from home - and this is from students who are typically "allergic" to writing. However, you will want to narrow your focus to a specific genre writing assignment, project-related idea (friendly letter, classroom newsletter post), or the writing process for the TechQuest. One of my teacher friends has her students take turns reporting/posting on daily classroom events. Great home-school communication tool. Students draft, edit, revise, and publish their own post. It is saved in draft mode - until the teacher approves it. Great strategy for monitoring whether or not a child has spent quality time editing their work. I'm looking forward to see which direction you take this project.

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  6. What a fantastic idea! I also teach third graders - and have my own reluctant writers. Blogging would be a novel idea for them. I'm interested in how you implemented this - individual blogs vs a class blog? time in setting them up, etc.

    I wonder if students always have to take things to final drafts? Can it be a place for just their pre-writing or brainstorming where they can get comments about their ideas for different possible stories. Then after reading all the comments and answering them, they can develop their ideas to move onto first drafts? Could it be a place for journaling?

    I know I usually take my students through to publishing and had to start letting them learn from the minilessons, their own experiences with the writing process and 6 traits and through peer-revising/editing. I tend to conference with those that need more help and then I pick a few pieces to read for more detailed comments and marking throughout each quarter.

    But perhaps, just letting them write in different formats and not always going to publishing, would present it's own benefits through just practice and enjoying writing as often as possible.

    Good luck! Sounds like your students are getting a lot out of your learning!

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  7. Jen-
    I just have a classroom blog. I thought that would be the easiest to maintain for me. I didn't want to have to worry about 21 different blogs that I would have to keep up with, especially with what the material they are typing in. My kids are still learning about the internet and some of them want to write down where they live in town because they aren't aware of any dangers of posting on-line. I wanted my blog to be for final drafts only because then we are working on the writing process...I also get to take a writing grade for every single student every single week :)

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